Effective strategies for conscious living

circle Who am I? Why am I here? What am I here to do? Where will I go when my body dies? 

As a child I was a seeker full of questions and as an adult I’m still a seeker and questioner. I am committed to opening my mind as wide as possible to all possibilities.

Are you a seeker and questioner too? Or do you have all the answers?

What shapes our lives are the questions we ask, refuse to ask, or never think of asking. The question is the helmsman of consciousness. Our minds, bodies, feelings, relationships are all informed by our questions. The complex networks of neurons that make up a mind are as individual as our fingerprints. — Sam Keen in What You Ask is Who You Are

In the Beginning

When I was young it seemed that the adults around me  had all the answers.  Asking individual  adults what they thought their purpose in life was, and what their ultimate destiny would be  would produce identical answers.  As a teen I  disbelieved “the correct answers” I had been given, but by then I had learned that raising questions about them would lead to swift and painful punishment, so I kept my questions to myself.

Living, loving and learning

As a young adult I came to know the reason all  adults I knew all had the same answers to all the questions I asked was because their answers were recitations of the same institutionalized religious dogma and doctrine.   They were programed to live and die within the confines of the Christian creation myth, and to accept without question the values, ideology  and politics of the generations who had gone before them.

Awakening

If we choose to challenge the belief system we have been raised in and live our life in emotional integrity then we can go for it slowly or go for it quickly. What is most important is that we go for it effectively.

I became conscious thorough meditation.  Meditation does not seek for information or make inquiries. It does not ask that a wish or desire be granted; it does not seek intervention on the mediator’s behalf, or the behalf of another person, place or situation.

The meditative state is achieved by stilling of the mind and body, becoming aware of vital stillness, and hearing within that still silence. It is the stillness of being naturally present before you become attached to thoughts and things; before you identify with thought-feeling-reaction.

I opened my mind reexamined my core beliefs and values and  replaced those that were no longer useful with those that were my own answers to the mysteries of the universe. I came to know more about living, loving learning and dying.

  • Ideas, theories and beliefs are not necessarily truths.
  • A belief is not an idea held by the mind; it is an idea that holds the mind.
  • We don’t see things as they are; we see things as we are.

Today I am keenly aware that my beliefs shape my reality. I  continue to reexamine them at irregular intervals, when questions arise and new approaches to finding answers are required.

Are You Conscious?

We seek purpose when we are not in touch with who we really are. When you discover who you are (at the deepest place of your being) you will find your purpose.— Colleen-Joy Page

Living consciously  is actually a lifestyle that few master.  Being conscious involves asking questions,  seeking answers  and thinking about why you do what you do.

Without doubt it’s easier to repeat doing what we always do without questioning why we do what we do, simply because it’s what we’re used to doing. Conscious living means rising to the challenge to question and break out of  non-productivity cycles  so  we can begin to craft  the lives we really want to live by design.

The important thing is to question the life you are living so  you really know and understand your life for what it is, then you can make course corrections whenever they are  needed.

The important thing is not to stop questioning. — Albert Einstein

Effective strategies for conscious living

1. When we question, “What beliefs am I clinging to that are obstructing my progress? We are on our way to choosing to live consciously.

2.  When we choose to break through old thought patterns by trying new ways of doing familiar tasks, we are choosing  to live consciously.

2. When we  incorporate techniques from one discipline to  solve problems in another, we are choosing to live consciously.

4. When we choose to keep all the possibilities in play, we allow our brain to seek unique solutions. This is another example of choosing conscious living.

Two tried and true methods of cultivating a questioning mind that leads to conscious living are  journaling and meditating.  I do both. Do you?

A Close Look at Smiles

smilingWithout doubt faces wearing frowns repel us and faces wearing smiles draw us closer. Hence the saying:

Smile and the whole world smiles with you: frown and you frown alone.

Smiling can help you change your own attitude and mood to counteract the effects of stress.  It can also be received as a gift by others during times of stress. And under any circumstance a single smile has been known to provoke a  chain reaction response.

A closer look at smiles

There are hundreds of different variations of smiles expressing the full range of  human emotion. Experts including anthropologists, biologists and psychologists agree,  the smile is recognizable worldwide and can be viewed as  an international language understood by people across all cultures.

On one hand, if you choose to wear a smile, when you don’t feel like it, you soon be smiling for real and drawing people to you.  On the other, not every smile is authentic  — only a smile recognized as being genuine makes other people smile.

How can smiles be measured and what are the characteristics of a fake  smile?

In July BBC reported the a value of the smile story that peaked my interest.  A Japanese rail firm introduced  computerized scanners around 15 Tokyo stations to measure the broadness of their employee’s smiles, and those with smiles that fail to measure up will be advised to look more cheerful. The software developed by Omron will also be used by a hospital in Osaka to assess staff friendliness, and at a truck stop to measure the tiredness of drivers.

This month the BBC reported a new study suggests people from different cultures read facial expressions differently.

In the study, East Asians were more likely than Westerners to read the expression for “fear” as “surprise”, and “disgust” as “anger”.

The researchers say the confusion arises because people from different cultural groups observe different parts of the face when interpreting expression.

East Asian participants tended to focus on the eyes of the other person, while Western subjects took in the whole face, including the eyes and the mouth.

Spot The Fake Smile Test

  • This experiment is designed to test whether you can spot the difference between a fake smile and a real one
  • It has 20 questions and should take you 10 minutes
  • It is based on research by Professor Paul Ekman, a psychologist at the University of California
  • Each video clip will take approximately 15 seconds to load on a 56k modem and you can only play each smile once — BBC Psychology Test

Time to smile

I haven’t been smiling much this summer. I have been under tremendous stress, and grieving the loss of my two little dogs, and coping with the most painful fibromyalgia episode I have ever endured.

Sometimes it’s life’s wake up calls like health crises that help us focus on making self-improvements. I intuit that I need to focus on doing myself and others the favor of smiling more frequently.

In her article The Art of Smiling blogger Tina Su provides tips on smiling and one of them is:

I’ve found it useful to be conscious of things that make me smile. You might want to spend a few minutes making a list of things that brings a smile to your face.

She inspired me to begin a What makes you smile? list. Some of the things I listed are below:
hearing “I love you”
being called beautiful
being appreciated
being hugged
being kissed
dancing
singing

So readers what would you include on your own What Makes Me Smile List?

Earth Day 2009

Earth Day 2009

Earth Day 2009

Earth Day

Earth Day 2009, April 22, will mark the beginning of the Green Generation Campaign!

This two-year initiative will culminate with the 40th anniversary of Earth Day in 2010. With negotiations for a new global climate agreement coming up in December, Earth Day 2009 must be a day of action and civic participation, to defend the Green Generation’s core principles: Family with windmills: Renewable energy for future generations.

This post is submission to the Bloggers Unite for Earth Day event
Prayer credit: appleseeds

Honorable mention:
Steps to Value Earth Day
Bloggers Unite Earth Day

No Competence – No Success

No Competence – No Success by Guest Author Windroot

Every Man A Giant

Every Man A Giant

Letʼs begin with a caveat. No matter how many tips for success you read, nothing replaces competence.  Assuming a minimal aptitude for the work, what follows are some practical lessons learned over a 35 year career working in a large organization as a middle manager.

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